Shadow Glyphs is the brand new puzzle game from Mixlore, being one part of the Logiquest product range. This abstract puzzle revolves around light and more importantly, as the name suggests, the shadows cast. Predominantly sold as a single player experience, Shadow Glyphs sees the player in the heart of the...
These 18 spectacular paintings, most on show in Britain for the first time, capture the speed of Munch’s evolution from breezy pastiche to masterly melancholy. Edvard Munch, at the Courtauld Galleries, is a powerful revelation. It could hardly be otherwise, in one sense, since most of these paintings have never been seen in this country before. They were bought in the 19th century by the Norwegian industrialist Rasmus Meyer, who owned grain mills in the coastal city of Bergen and was determined that the local people should have as good a chance to look at the country’s greatest living artist as anyone in Oslo. And there they have remained ever since, in a city surrounded by fjords and facing Shetland across the cold waters of the North Sea.
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